US arms sales to Taiwan, nuclear weapons and military-to-military communication will be among topics discussed, experts say
3-MIN READ3-MIN ListenAmber Wangin BeijingandAlcott Weiin BeijingPublished: 9:23pm, 13 May 2026Updated: 9:24pm, 13 May 2026US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth’s rare presence in President Donald Trump’s entourage to Beijing signals a willingness on both sides to strengthen military communications to de-escalate and avoid crises, and suggests US arms sales to Taiwan will feature in talks, analysts say.The Chinese experts expected Beijing to include Defence Minister Dong Jun in talks during the summit, with one source suggesting that Dong and Hegseth might also hold separate talks on the sidelines of the Xi-Trump summit.The summit might include discussion of nuclear weapons and restoring and expanding military-to-military communication channels, they said.
Zhu Feng, dean of the School of International Studies at Nanjing University, said Hegseth’s participation was likely to advance bilateral military communication mechanisms and crisis management.
Since Hegseth was taking part, Zhu said China would “at the least” bring in Dong, its minister of national defence, to the summit.